Article 61DKE Google says you can now turn these 400 Macs, PCs into reliable Chromebooks

Google says you can now turn these 400 Macs, PCs into reliable Chromebooks

by
Scharon Harding
from Ars Technica - All content on (#61DKE)
UPDATED-UI-SCREENS-01.png

Enlarge / Google Chrome OS Flex. (credit: Google)

Google today announced in a blog post that ChromeOS Flex, a version of its Chromebook operating system suitable for most hardware, has moved from early access to general availability. It also said it certified "over 400" devices, including systems from Apple, Dell, and HP, to run the OS smoothly and stably.

Google announced ChromeOS Flex in February, building upon its 2020 acquisition of CloudReady (CloudReady becomes ChromeOS Flex now that the latter is stable). Cloud OS Flex is downloadable to a USB drive for free, allowing you to install it on a Mac or Windows PC.

The most obvious use for ChromeOS Flex is to bring new life to a dated machine that may be too old to get software updates for its native OS. Our ChromeOS Flex beta review found the OS to be an interesting alternative for people content with doing most of their computing in a browser and for getting a budget-level Chromebook experience from an 8-to 9-year-old system.

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